Anonymous wrote:I need to be out of town a week after I am schedule to pick up a new puppy. Is this an awful idea? The puppy can't stay at the breeder any longer but he would be boarded at a vets office with 24/7 staff. Horrible idea?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes horrible idea. You can’t get this puppy if they can’t stay with the breeder or at your house with someone else at a minimum. If your life also involved travel you can’t plan (didn’t you know about the puppy??) and no one who lives with you getting a puppy may not be in the cards at the moment.
I was on a waitlist for a puppy and someone didn't pick up their 12 week old puppy from the last litter so I got a call from the breeder and just said yes. If I don't take him I need to wait for a puppy.
Anonymous wrote:So the breeder is ok Selling you a puppy knowing you are going on travel and it’s potentially going to be boarded so soon after leaving its mother?
These breeders that keep churning out puppys for profit make me sick.
OP no it’s not ok, it’s good there is 24/7 staff bif try and fine to stay in your home for a week or that will watch the puppy in their home. Pay well. You’ve got this issue for the next 15 years or so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes horrible idea. You can’t get this puppy if they can’t stay with the breeder or at your house with someone else at a minimum. If your life also involved travel you can’t plan (didn’t you know about the puppy??) and no one who lives with you getting a puppy may not be in the cards at the moment.
I was on a waitlist for a puppy and someone didn't pick up their 12 week old puppy from the last litter so I got a call from the breeder and just said yes. If I don't take him I need to wait for a puppy.
Anonymous wrote:Yes horrible idea. You can’t get this puppy if they can’t stay with the breeder or at your house with someone else at a minimum. If your life also involved travel you can’t plan (didn’t you know about the puppy??) and no one who lives with you getting a puppy may not be in the cards at the moment.
Anonymous wrote:It isn't ideal to board a puppy until it has completed the puppy series of vaccinations and rabies. I am surprised a vet would agree to it. However, sometimes you have to do what you have to do. If you can swing it, a house sitter to stay with the puppy in your home would be better. I'd really worry about contagion boarding in a communal facility. I know it isn't the same thing, but both of my shelter pups came to me with a pretty nasty respiratory infection that they contracted in the shelter.